Glycan foraging in vivo by an intestine-adapted bacterial symbiont
Science, 2005•science.org
Germ-free mice were maintained on polysaccharide-rich or simple-sugar diets and
colonized for 10 days with an organism also found in human guts, Bacteroides
thetaiotaomicron, followed by whole-genome transcriptional profiling of bacteria and mass
spectrometry of cecal glycans. We found that these bacteria assembled on food particles
and mucus, selectively induced outer-membrane polysaccharide-binding proteins and
glycoside hydrolases, prioritized the consumption of liberated hexose sugars, and revealed …
colonized for 10 days with an organism also found in human guts, Bacteroides
thetaiotaomicron, followed by whole-genome transcriptional profiling of bacteria and mass
spectrometry of cecal glycans. We found that these bacteria assembled on food particles
and mucus, selectively induced outer-membrane polysaccharide-binding proteins and
glycoside hydrolases, prioritized the consumption of liberated hexose sugars, and revealed …
Germ-free mice were maintained on polysaccharide-rich or simple-sugar diets and colonized for 10 days with an organism also found in human guts, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, followed by whole-genome transcriptional profiling of bacteria and mass spectrometry of cecal glycans. We found that these bacteria assembled on food particles and mucus, selectively induced outer-membrane polysaccharide-binding proteins and glycoside hydrolases, prioritized the consumption of liberated hexose sugars, and revealed a capacity to turn to host mucus glycans when polysaccharides were absent from the diet. This flexible foraging behavior should contribute to ecosystem stability and functional diversity.
